Abstract

This study explores molten carbonate electrolysis and fuel cell behaviour across temperatures from 823 to 973 K using steady-state polarization (SSP), electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), and inert-gas step addition (ISA) techniques. The findings reveal that total voltage loss decreases with rising temperature in fuel cell (FC) and electrolysis (EC) modes. The ohmic loss similarly declines as temperature increases. The ISA method determines the gas-phase mass transfer-induced overpotential, which increases as temperature increases in both modes at the hydrogen electrode (HE). This indicates that pore diffusion resistance strongly affects the HE in both modes. The liquid-phase mass transfer-induced overpotential at the oxygen electrode (OE) exhibits a much smaller value in EC mode than in FC mode at all temperatures. The increased O2 and CO2 partial pressures and decomposition of sufficient amounts of carbonate electrolytes to generate O2 in EC mode would reduce the liquid-phase resistance and its induced overpotential at the OE in the temperature range.

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